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1. FBI Agent
specialist, intelligence research specialist, secretary and, perhaps the most familiar,special agent searching for more than 10,000 fugitives at any given time
http://jobprofiles.monster.com/Content/job_content/JC_Military/JSC_PrivateSecuri

2. Advanced Searching
sites provide enduser searching, most (91 percent) of these corporations to be familiar with the best advanced Web searching tools, the most effective methods for searching
http://www.infotoday.com/online/MayOL/zorn5.html
Advanced Searching: Tricks of the Trade
by
Peggy Zorn, Mary Emanoil, and Lucy Marshall
Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical Research Library and Mary Panek
United Technologies Research Center
ONLINE , May 1996
S Despite the rapid proliferation and development of Web search systems over the past months, little attention has been devoted to the advanced features professional searchers and librarians have become accustomed to in other online information resources. Web novices and information professionals alike often overlook or miss detailed information such as:
  • what a particular Web search system is searching
  • how the data has been indexed
  • how the search engine retrieves data
  • what advanced techniques (proximity operators, nested queries, search set manipulation and combination, duplicate detection, etc.) are available
In simple Web systems such as Yahoo! and Aliweb, knowing advanced search features is not as necessary because the depth of indexing and the power of the search engine is not as great. However, with more sophisticated Web search systems, the need to narrow basic keyword retrieval due to large retrieval sets using types of features available in established commercial online services is becoming painfully obvious. As the Web grows, and databases searched by the major Web search engines increase in size, the power to seek, index, and retrieve information must growalong with the information professional's knowledge of how to effectively search the Web. Typical end-users may have no trouble browsing and locating information on uncomplicated topics, but constructing complex search queries using sophisticated Web search engines is another matter entirely. End-users may increasingly rely on information professionals for complex Web searching, much as they do for online commercial databases.

3. The Biomedical Libraries At Dartmouth
131 One with which I am most familiar 82 Ease of use 43 Speed 58 Precision ofsearching 44 Breadth of searching 70 Ability to build a strategy based on
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~biomed/about.htmld/ovidsurvey.shtml
Results of the Spring 2002 Survey on Ovid and Other Search Systems
In April 2002 we asked users to complete a survey about Ovid and other search systems. The results will help us as we evaluate the Biomedical Libraries' commitment to Ovid as a platform for providing biomedical information. 215 surveys were completed. Here are the results for individual questions: 1. Which of the following best describes you?: 62 Clinician/Physician
71 Researcher/Scientist
6 Educator
5 Nurse
10 House Staff/Resident
19 Medical Student
7 Other Graduate Student
7 Undergraduate Student
1 Other Healthcare Professional
27 Other 2. What is your affiliation, based on your e-mail or CIS name and password? 40 Hitchcock.org
128 Dartmouth.edu 44 Both 3 Neither 3. Which one database do you search most often? 142 Ovid MEDLINE 43 PubMed 5 Ovid BIOSIS 8 Web of Science 1 Ovid CINAHL 3 CSA PsycInfo 8 MD Consult 2 Dartmouth Library Catalog 1 Other 4. What database do you use next most often? 31 Ovid MEDLINE 41 PubMed 5 Ovid BIOSIS 14 Web of Science 5 Ovid CINAHL 10 CSA PsycInfo 29 MD Consult 37 Dartmouth Library Catalog 14 Other 31 None 5. How important is it to you that your most frequently consulted databases have the same "look and feel" or search interface? For example, Ovid is currently used for more than one database: MEDLINE, CINAHL, BIOSIS.

4. How To Do Field Searching In Web Search Engines: A Field Trip
been able to take for granted when searching most databases. It lets us quickly get to most fields in AltaVista are searched using a familiar approach. Prefixes with a colon
http://www.onlinemag.net/OL1998/hock5.html
How to Do Field Searching in Web Search Engines: A Field Trip
by Ran Hock
ONLINE , May 1998
Information Today, Inc.
You never miss the water until the well runs dry. Absence makes the heart grow fonder. Y ou've all heard the folk wisdom about not taking things for granted. Field searching is something that the serious searcher has been able to take for granted when searching most databases. It lets us quickly get to a highly relevant set of records or easily find the citation for a title we know. It lets us distinguish between a sales figure of $1,000,000 and the same figure as long-term debt. With traditional online services such as Dialog, even occasional users take advantage of the ability to search specific fields. Most searchers frequently use AU=, PY=, LA=, and a few others, and literally hundreds of other fields are used for more refined searches. When precision is the goal, field searching is indispensable. However, as we explore Web search engines, we discover that there is little we can take for granted, including the ability to search within a specific field. With the typically high noise level of many straightforward Web searches, the potential value of precision tools, such as field searching, is especially obvious. Fortunately, some Web search engines do provide at least a rudimentary field search capability, but because of the immature nature of the engines, the options are neither very numerous nor particularly sophisticated.

5. How To Do Field Searching In Web Search Engines: A Field Trip
AltaVista allows searching of the From, Subject, Summary, Newsgroup, and Keywordsfields. most fields in AltaVista are searched using a familiar approach.
http://www.onlineinc.com/online/OL1998/hock5.html
How to Do Field Searching in Web Search Engines: A Field Trip
by Ran Hock
ONLINE , May 1998
Information Today, Inc.
You never miss the water until the well runs dry. Absence makes the heart grow fonder. Y ou've all heard the folk wisdom about not taking things for granted. Field searching is something that the serious searcher has been able to take for granted when searching most databases. It lets us quickly get to a highly relevant set of records or easily find the citation for a title we know. It lets us distinguish between a sales figure of $1,000,000 and the same figure as long-term debt. With traditional online services such as Dialog, even occasional users take advantage of the ability to search specific fields. Most searchers frequently use AU=, PY=, LA=, and a few others, and literally hundreds of other fields are used for more refined searches. When precision is the goal, field searching is indispensable. However, as we explore Web search engines, we discover that there is little we can take for granted, including the ability to search within a specific field. With the typically high noise level of many straightforward Web searches, the potential value of precision tools, such as field searching, is especially obvious. Fortunately, some Web search engines do provide at least a rudimentary field search capability, but because of the immature nature of the engines, the options are neither very numerous nor particularly sophisticated.

6. Boolean Searching
Explains how to use Boolean commands and operators on the major search engines. It assumes you are already familiar with Boolean searching, although some resources that provide further proximity within your searches. most search engines will try to find the
http://www.searchenginewatch.com/facts/boolean.html

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7. Effective Online Searching
Web, finding relevant information demands very specific searching skills and The firststep is to become familiar with the most of us use just one search engine
http://www.bewebaware.ca/english/EffectiveOnline.aspx
Parents,
get involved!
Effective Online Searching
Due to the sheer size of the World Wide Web, finding relevant information demands very specific searching skills and techniques. Learning how to choose the right search engine and practicing effective search methods helps minimize the irrelevant and offensive material that can turn up in a search.
Choosing the right search engine
The first step is to become familiar with the different types of search engines and the various services they provide. There are hundreds of search engines from which to choose, and there are several distinct styles of gathering, grouping and presenting information.
Conducting your search
Finding the right search engines is only the beginning. Developing effective search techniques greatly improves your chances of accessing quality information.
Here are some helpful tips from the Media Awareness Network Web site:
  • Use six to eight key words, preferably nouns.
  • Most users submit only one or two key words per search, which is not enough for an effective query.
  • Spell carefully, and try alternative spellings.

8. Information Seeking Behavior In New Searching Environments
in whatever IR system they were most familiar with; what they would do to searchers in their familiar searching environments. We discovered that while most searchers in our
http://www.scils.rutgers.edu/~sypark/colis.html
Information Seeking Behavior in New Searching Environments
Colleen Cool, Soyeon Park, Nicholas Belkin, Jurgen Koenemann and Kwong Bor Ng Abstract
We report on a study concerned with understanding people's adaptation to new information searching environments. We have investigated how people with varying degrees of familiarity with information retrieval systems, and varying models of the information retrieval process, interacted in an information retrieval system which did not support exact match retrieval with structured queries, but which did support best match ranked output retrieval with unstructured queries and automatic relevance feedback. Our results include a classification of "normal" information retrieval strategies, the description of several adaptation strategies, and the relationships between type and strength of people's mental models of information retrieval and their searching behaviors in the new information retrieval context. An important aspect of our study is its methodology for understanding and relating cognitive contexts to information seeking behaviors. 1. Introduction

9. On Menu Based Web Searching
most seasoned searchers are familiar with pull down Although some browsers allow youto use this field for searching, this is not the field provided by the
http://www.pandia.com/goalgetter/menu.html
Menu based Web searching PANDIA
13. Menu based Web searching
HOME If you discuss advanced Internet searching with search engine officials, they will probably tell you that most searchers are not interested in learning true Boolean searching, and that they prefer menu based search options. This may be so, but then again most searchers do not know what they are missing. We find menu based search facilities to be more confusing than Boolean searching, and they are not as flexible when it comes to building more complex queries. That being said, menu based pages for advanced searching may be quite efficient, as soon as you get a grip on how they work. (If you do not know a search form from a web address field or a pull down menu from a radio button, please read the absolute beginners text box below first.) A menu based search page will include one (or more) search forms where you enter your search query. The simplest versions will give you one form to enter all your keywords, and a pull down menu that gives various options regarding how these keywords are to be treated by the search engine. Normally these options are:
  • All these words , meaning that the search engine is to fetch pages that have all these words on them (equals Boolean AND or +) Any words or One of these words

10. Searching For Bible Verses And Scriptures
Search for Bible verses Advanced Methods. searching for Bible verses, scriptures and quotes with new software the Holy Bible is the most familiar and widely read Bible translation
http://www.topicsites.com/ebooks/searching-for-bible-verses.htm
Search Bible Verses
Scriptures and Quotes
Bible Verses Search Software Search for Bible verses - Advanced Methods
Searching for Bible verses, scriptures and quotes with new software technology. The eBook Software shown below makes it possible to search bible verses anytime on your personal computer. You can try the free sample version that only contains the Book of Genesis. The complete eBook software contains the Old Testament, New Testament, Apocryphal Books (for historical perspective), original translator's preface and more... Recommended
Holy Bible
King James Version
Old Testament - Apocryphal Books - New Testament
Microsoft Reader
The King James version of the Holy Bible
is the most familiar and widely read Bible translation in the world, recognized for centuries as both a religious and literary classic. The invention of the printing press made the Holy Bible universally available and changed the world. Now this greatest of books is available in digital format. Special Features:
  • Advanced hyperlink navigation and scripture search features
  • Fully compatible with Microsoft ClearType technology
  • Personalized bookmark, highlighting, and notes features

11. Books On Web Searching And Search Engines
doesn’t these days?), you are already familiar with Google. However, most peopleare not aware of a fraction of way you can save hours of searching and spend
http://www.pandia.com/bookstore/
Books on Web searching Search for books, music and videos:
Select: Books from Amazon.com Music from Amazon.com Videos from Amazon.com DVDs from Amazon.com Books from Amazon.co.uk Music from Amazon.co.uk Videos from Amazon.co.uk DVDs from Amazon.co.uk Pandia Plus Directory Pandia Metasearch Pandia News PANDIA PANDIA RESOURCES Resource Index
Books on web searching and search engines
Yes, you may perfectly well enter a few words in a search engine query form, click on "Search!" and hope for the best. If you really want to find the best resources on the net, however, you should learn the web searching basics, i.e. how to formulate advanced queries and how to select the right kind of search tool. Pandia has an excellent tutorial on Web searching , but sometimes you need a little bit more. Moreover, you can read a book in bed or on the bus! Below find some of the best books on web searching. Please note, as regards search engines, history is what happened six months ago, and all printed publications on Web searching are somewhat out of date even before they reach the shelves.

12. The Lamont Library Website -- Cool Tools And Power Searching Tips
Lamont's Power searching Tips and Cool Tools. Last updated 5 May, 2004. Power searching Tips and Cool Tools are regular features of the LamontNewsList, published during the academic year. to frame a search in terms that feel natural and most familiar, or that present themselves as right and sensible choices
http://hcl.harvard.edu/lamont/resources/tipsandtools
Lamont's Power Searching Tips and Cool Tools Last updated 5 May, 2004 Power Searching Tips and Cool Tools are regular features of the LamontNews-List, published during the academic year. To subscribe to LamontNews-list, send a message to majordomo@fas.harvard.edu. In the body of the message type " subscribe lamontnews-list yourname@fas.harvard.edu Power Searching Tips Cool Tools
  • Four easy ways to limit your HOLIS catalog searches Truncating your searches in HOLLIS and other online databases Why you need to go beyond JSTOR in your search for journal articles The Harvard Depository Demystified ... Citation Indexes: a special group of databases that can do a lot for you!
  • Power Searching Tips 1. Four easy ways to limit your HOLLIS catalog searches
      The HOLLIS catalog contains information on a mind-boggling 14.5 million library items. New materials are being purchased for library collections all the time. As a Harvard student you'll need to be able to search HOLLIS effectively, but anytime you use it, there's also the danger of information overload. What's an undergraduate to do? One answer is to use the catalog's LIMIT options. HOLLIS offers you four types. Here's what they are:

    13. Looking For Something? : Searching The Web
    should have an intuitive userinterface that may be familiar to most users. Thisis sufficient for searching the term JavaScript but not necessarily for
    http://tech.irt.org/articles/js167/
    Looking for Something? : Searching the Web Home Articles FAQs Xref ... World Wide Web (WWW) Published on: Sunday 20th June 1999 By: Pankaj Kamthan
    Introduction
    The Web is one of the world's largest sources of publicly available information. It provides a myriad of information, though still lacks in navigational aids. It is important for users to search relevant information efficiently and quickly on the Web. As GVU Center's 10th WWW User Survey (October 1998) shows, finding both existing and new information is a significant problem that is currently facing the Web in general. Figure 1. Problems Using the Web. To help us deal with incredible amount of data, a new skill is needed: Web searching. Given a topic, anyone with a Web browser and access to the Internet can search the Web for information on that topic. Searching, however, is not the same thing as finding. There is little organization or consistency on the Web.
    Obstacles to Searching
    A variety of problems can occur while searching through the Web:
    • Lack of Success.

    14. Directory: Searching For Bobby Fischer
    your first stop! click here for more on searching for bobby fischer poetry and technology collide in this eyecatching movie about the primordial cycle of the four seasons. william shatner searching for bobby fischer - if your aren't familiar with tax laws and regulations for and other emotions. - searching for bobby fischer - most people are completely unaware
    http://www.entmt.com/searching-for-bobby-fischer.html
    Search Results Orbitz - Fisher Island, FL Hotels
    Reserve a room at one of many Fisher Island, Florida hotels. Book lodging after searching for availability by price or date.
    Advertiser paid: $00.0760 Titanium Bracelets by Forza Tesori
    Built for success and designed to inspire. Before searching other metals come see the stunning appeal of our Forza Tesori titanium bracelets.
    Advertiser paid: $00.0570 AAA Discount Metal Detectors
    Company sells Fisher, Tesoro, Garrett, Bounty Hunter, and Troy Shadow x5 and x3 metal detectors and accessories, including search coils, scoops and headphones.
    Advertiser paid: $00.0570

    15. FINDING INFORMATION ON THE WEB - DIRECTORIES AND SEARCHING
    To be the most successful at using familiar with several directories. By doing so you will decrease the amount of time spent searching. most directories
    http://rvcc2.raritanval.edu/~bobberto/160/finfo.html
    FINDING INFORMATION ON THE WEB - DIRECTORIES AND SEARCHING DIRECTORIES
    • collections of hyperlinks to the WWW and other resources usually arranged according to subject headings (News, Health, Medicine, Science,..) most useful when you know what you are looking for and what category or heading it is under most directories include a search tool to look through that directory only must be specifically added to directory to be included most services are free
    SEARCH ENGINES (or WEB INDEX)
    • programs that search the WWW sites and create a database or index of all the text, titles, hyperlinks, and URLs they find a computer program with a database to find items whose text contains all or at least one of the words given to it help you collect and then browse information from lots of sources most services are free and are sponsored by or owned by a commercial organization some have a fee which many companies, news agencies and research organizations are willing to pay for relies on robots to find new pages most services are free
    DIRECTORIES As indicated earlier, most directories organize their lists of hyperlinks according to subject. To get a listing of directories click on

    16. Tips
    who are not accustomed to searching the literature outside databases are powerfulresource tools, most databases do on CDROM to become familiar with abstracts
    http://www.nal.usda.gov/awic/alternatives/tips.htm
    Tips for Searching for Alternatives to Animal Research and Testing
    Provided by the Animal Welfare Information Center
    United States Department of Agriculture
    National Agricultural Library
    AWIC Tips for Searching for Alternatives to Animal Research and Testing
    (Edited version of this document published in March 1994 issue of Lab Animal Cynthia P. Smith, M.S.
    Technical Information Specialist
    Animal Welfare Information Center The following guidelines were developed to assist researchers, information specialists, and Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) members, when conducting literature searches to determine if alternatives to the use of animals exist and whether a protocol unnecessary duplicates previous research. When searching for alternatives, the staff at the Animal Welfare Information Center (AWIC) refer to the tenets of the 3 R's introduced by W.M.S. Russell and R.L Burch(1959) in their book The Principles of Humane Experimental Technique 1. The 3 R's represent reduction in the number of animals used, refinement of techniques and procedures that reduce pain and distress, and replacement of animal with non-animal techniques. The first step in conducting a search for alternatives, involves communication between the investigator and the information specialist. The specialist cannot effectively search for alternatives without a basic understanding of the type of research the investigator is proposing. The most efficient means of communicating is a direct dialogue between the investigator and the information specialist. A third party should not be used to convey information.

    17. Shakespeare Resources - Searching
    simply proceed by brute force to find the most occurrences of searching strategiesare limited and the use of booleans only quasi Bartlett s familiar Quotations.
    http://shakespeare.palomar.edu/searching.htm
    Introduction
    Top On this page I have grouped specifically Shakespearean search tools. There are some surprisingly good ones. I have provided an annotated section which describes them, followed by a "quick" table to the sites, for repeat visitors who do not wish to bother wading through the annotations. After the specifically Shakespearean sites, I have provided a guide to the more general best search tools on the web. Regarding these, I have grouped them into search engines and subject catalogs , though some sites are a mixture of both. A true search engine attempts to build indices to "all that is out there" via automated information gathering programs known as robots or spiders, and then lets you search the indices by keyword(s). The best allow sophisticated searching using booleans, proximity operators and logical groupings of search terms. The size and quality of the indices vary greatly, and a search on the same term(s) using different engines invariably returns different results. The best search engine by far is Google A second class of search tools is like a traditional library subject catalog

    18. Searching For Our Primate Ancestors In China
    mammals, is responsible for the familiar glow in of higher primates I had been searchingfor. This alone contradicted most predictions concerning the earliest
    http://www.cruzio.com/~cscp/beard.htm
    Searching for Our Primate Ancestors in China
    Carnegie scientist Chris Beard discovers a new rung on the ladder of evolution
    Carnegie paleontologist Chris Beard tells how he made the scientific and political choices governing his selection of fossil research sites, and what it's like to discover a very early rung on the ladder of human evolution.
    By Chris Beard Toward the end of The Origin of Species , his landmark treatise that made the theory of evolution one of the most influential ideas in modern science, Charles Darwin wanted to give his concept a humanistic slant. Darwin knew that his new theory, which he had so elegantly supported using examples from Galapagos Islands finches, domestic animals and many more obscure representatives of the animal kingdom, applied equally to humans. His problem was to make this point without overly offending the entrenched cultural and religious beliefs of Victorian England. Darwin decided to approach the subject stealthily—he simply noted that African apes, which were still only poorly known to Western science, suggested that the original cradle of humanity might well have been the African continent. Thus in one stroke, Darwin accurately anticipated later fossil discoveries, such as the Taung baby, Lucy, and other early hominids, which most scientists now agree pinpoint Africa as the ancestral homeland of humankind. Thanks to the work of noted paleoanthropologists such as Raymond Dart, Louis and Richard Leakey, and my former professor Alan Walker, we now know that humans evolved from ape-like ancestors that lived in Africa 5-10 million years ago. Transitional forms that document this evolutionary progression, known by such formidable scientific names as Ardipithecus ramidus, Australopithecus afarensis and Homo erectus, show that early human ancestors evolved the capacity to walk on two legs (bipedalism) millions of years before their brains grew larger than those of chimpanzees. Although many gaps remain, in the grand scheme of things we know how natural selection transformed our ape-like ancestors into the thoughtful beings we are today.

    19. Locating Tax Authority: Boolean Searches
    Boolean Searches. Boolean is one form of keyword searching. As keywords.The most familiar and common connectors are AND and OR.
    http://www.gsu.edu/~accerl/home/BooleanSearches.html
    Boolean Searches
    Connecting Words
    An effective and efficient Boolean search requires careful selection of keywords (as the prior lesson discussed) and the use of logical connectors between keywords. The most familiar and common connectors are AND and OR. (Here and elsewhere, I present connectors in all capital letters to emphasize that they are connectors. Most search engines do not require their entry in caps.) The more powerful Boolean search engines permit other connectors also. Using AND between keywords requires the system to retrieve all documents containing both keywords. If a document contains just one of the keywords connected with AND, the Boolean request will not retrieve it. The AND connector does not require keywords to be near each other, only that they appear in the same document. Thus, tax professionals should not use AND connectors when proximity is important and more powerful connectors (discussed later) are available. Overusing the AND connector tends to increase the number of irrelevant documents retrieved and, thus, results in inefficiencies. Strategy 1: Do not overuse AND connectors. When you expect proximity, select a more powerful connector.

    20. Why Job Searching Is The Second Most Popular Activity On The Internet - Knowledg
    Peak job searching time is from noon to 4 pm the last 20 years, recruitment In mostorganizations was Someone who is already familiar with the company is less
    http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm?fa=viewArticle&ID=471

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